Significance of pharyngeal colonization with aerobic gram-negative bacilli in elderly institutionalized men.

scientific article

Significance of pharyngeal colonization with aerobic gram-negative bacilli in elderly institutionalized men. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1093/AGEING/15.1.47
P698PubMed publication ID3082122

P2093author name stringNicolle LE
McIntyre M
MacDonell JA
McLeod J
P433issue1
P921main subjectGram-negative bacteriaQ632006
P304page(s)47-52
P577publication date1986-01-01
P1433published inAge and AgeingQ4691852
P1476titleSignificance of pharyngeal colonization with aerobic gram-negative bacilli in elderly institutionalized men.
P478volume15

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q34021161Antimicrobial use in long-term-care facilities. SHEA Long-Term-Care Committee
Q35552787Dental and microbiological risk factors for hospital-acquired pneumonia in non-ventilated older patients
Q37478235Detecting potential respiratory pathogens in the mouths of older people in hospital
Q40676086Febrile urinary infection in the institutionalized elderly
Q37013020Healthcare-associated pneumonia: principles and emerging concepts on management
Q35368713Infections and antibiotic resistance in nursing homes
Q35088617Infectious disease risk in the elderly
Q28250650Nursing home-acquired pneumonia: update on treatment options
Q90731673Oropharyngeal colonization: epidemiology, treatment and ventilator-associated pneumonia prevention
Q51178245Oropharyngeal dysphagia as a risk factor for malnutrition and lower respiratory tract infection in independently living older persons: a population-based prospective study.
Q43680065Polypharmacy is an independent risk factor for oropharyngeal isolation of gram-negative bacilli in older persons
Q36473170Sink flora in a long-stay hospital is determined by the patients' oral and rectal flora